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User: thue

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  1. Re:AMD is done and gone... on AMD Trinity A10-4600M Processor Launched, Tested · · Score: 2

    > The Intel CPUs are so far ahead, in performance and value, that I can't help but feel embarrassed for AMD.

    Not so. The Intel traditional CPU is faster, but the AMD integrated GPU is faster.

    For AMD's pure-CPU parts, they seem competitively priced to me (ie: cheap).

  2. Re:Again. on NASA's Hansen Calls Out Obama On Climate Change · · Score: 1

    > Every political debate in the USA about climate change countermeasures [...]

    Europe is perfectly capable of making hard decisions here.

  3. Re:why ? on China Plans To End Executed Prisoner Organ Donations Within 5 Years · · Score: 1

    You made the non sequitur that having a donor card makes you drive carelessly, without trying to argue for it. You can't just say that it is my job to prove the negative of your assumption.

  4. Re:why ? on China Plans To End Executed Prisoner Organ Donations Within 5 Years · · Score: 2

    > You could just as well claim that donor cards make people drive less carefully and thus should be banned.

    That analogy doesn't hold. A judge can be paid or pressured to deliver organs via death sentences. In contrast, having a donor card doesn't give you any incentive to driving carelessly.

  5. Revolving door on FTC Attorney Joins Microsoft · · Score: 3, Interesting

    From http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revolving_door_(politics) :

    In politics, the "revolving door" is the movement of personnel between roles as legislators and regulators and the industries affected by the legislation and regulation. In some cases the roles are performed in sequence but in certain circumstances may be performed at the same time. Political analysts claim that an unhealthy relationship can develop between the private sector and government, based on the granting of reciprocated privileges to the detriment of the nation and can lead to regulatory capture.

  6. Re:What? on No More SSL Revocation Checking For Chrome · · Score: 1

    > So he admits Chrome is broken, so he doesn't fix it and blames the CA's . . makes sense.

    If the CAs' blacklists worked reliably, then chrome wouldn't need to ignore when they were down. So it is the CAs' fault.

  7. Re:Actually an extremely good point on Pwn2Own 2012 Set To Reveal More Browser Vulnerabilities Than In the Past · · Score: 1

    If the exploit works by the user viewing a web page, an exploit which requires the user to view the web page for 3 seconds is significantly more powerful than an exploit which requires the user to view the web page for an hour.

    I know that the exploits are more proff of concept, and that the hour long exploit may (or may not) be capable of running faster. But time to exploit is still not totally irrellevant.

  8. Re:It works "Good enough" on What's Keeping You On XP? · · Score: 2

    All programs and drivers will continue to come with 32 bit versions for a long time. If your computer has XP on it, then it is presumably so old that it doesn't have more than 4GB RAM, so most normal people don't need 64bit.

  9. Re:Better ideas on The Second Moons of Earth · · Score: 1

    > Should be pretty interesting to see where it ends up.

    This is Newtonian mechanics. We can calculate where it ends up pretty accurately.

  10. Re:Silly on No IPv6 Doomsday In 2012 · · Score: 1

    > Only the regional NICs have run out of blocks to distribute. No one has actually run out of IPv4 addresses.

    APNIC is the only NIC which has run out of IPv4 adresses, on 14 April 2011. Surely there have been an ISP somewhere in Asia since then who wanted to use an IPv4 address, but haven't been able to. That should qualify as running out.

  11. Re:Accidental overdose? on The Painkiller That Saves Money But Costs Lives · · Score: 1

    > Seriously, you're going to bicker over semantics?

    The grandparent's post was about the semantics of "overdose", and he got a +5 informative for it. Saying

    > Overdose isn't when you take more then prescribed, it's when you take more then what your body can handle.

    is a semantic argument. So why shouldn't I point out that he is wrong.

  12. Re:Accidental overdose? on The Painkiller That Saves Money But Costs Lives · · Score: 1

    > Overdose isn't when you take more then prescribed, it's when you take more then what your body can handle.

    According to Wikipedia, an overdose "describes the ingestion or application of a drug or other substance in quantities greater than are recommended[1] or generally practiced.[2]"

    So your use of the word is incorrect.

  13. Re:Forced Voting? on Publicly Available Russian Election Results Hint At Fraud · · Score: 1

    > Then we get wankers like you who bitch and bitch and bitch about how Slashdot should editorialize and sensationalize their summaries.

    How is stating the obvious to "editorialize and sensationalize"?

  14. Re:Forced Voting? on Publicly Available Russian Election Results Hint At Fraud · · Score: 2, Insightful

    How can anybody (fx Slashdot) would describe 99.51% voting for United Russia in Chechnya as "hint at fraud" instead of the more correct "unambiguous evidence of fraud"? Is Slashdot owned by the Russian dictatorship?

  15. To be fair on Lego Bible Too Racy For Sam's Club · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If the Bible was judged purely on its contents, in the same way as other books, then it would require quite a warning label.

  16. Re:Eliminate districts on Open Source Tool Lets Anyone Redistrict New York · · Score: 4, Informative

    We have an at-large election system here in Denmark, as in much of continental Europe. This proportional representation gives each voter a vastly better opportunity to vote for the candidate which best represents him, instead of just having to vote for the lesser of two evils or throwing your vote away.

  17. Re:Live USB memory stick Live CD on Whither the Portable Optical Drive? · · Score: 2

    If you install grub onto your USB stick, then you can have a whole collection of live CDs, which can be accomplished by copying the iso to the USB stick and adjusting the grub configuration file. See for example http://www.panticz.de/MultiBootUSB

  18. Re:.... and it's not the only leech on Rambus Loses $4B Antitrust Case · · Score: 5, Informative

    > Then they sued everyone and if it were not for AMD Rambus would be the next monopoly in ram. AMD still used Sdram which many of us preferred over the high latency and $$$ rambus.

    It was not just AMD which used SDRAM. Other companies made chipsets and motherboards which worked with Intel CPUs and used SDRAM.

    As RDRAM failed to match SDRAM technically and price-wise, Intel was saved by their competitors selling Intel-compatible chipsets, for otherwise few people would have bough Intel CPUs. Because Intel was contractually obligated to only ship RDRAM-compatible motherboards.

  19. Re:Wait for Ivy Bridge. on Intel Launches Sandy Bridge-E Series Processors · · Score: 1

    Cute :).

    But IMO the jump from Sandy Bridge to Ivy Bridge is especially large, particularly in power consumption, so it makes sense to make Ivy Bridge the CPU to wait for.

  20. "by law, the drug czar must oppose..." on The White House Responds To We the People Petition · · Score: 1

    According to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_National_Drug_Control_Policy#Anti-legalization_Policy :

    > By law, the drug czar must oppose any attempt to legalize the use (in any form) of illicit drugs.

    This is the man who the Obama administration gave the job of answering the marijuana reform petition.

  21. WNDR3700 on Ask Slashdot: DD-WRT Upgrade To 802.11n? · · Score: 1

    I have seen the WNDR3700 recommended as being a good option. The hardware itself is relatively powerful, with a 680MHz processor, 64MiB RAM, and 8MiB flash. The 4 internal+1 external RJ-45 ports are gigabit. It costs US$120 from Newegg.com .

  22. Re:how did this make the front page? on Intel Z68 Motherboard Round-Up · · Score: 1

    Perhaps the point is just to highlight the new motherboards, and any review could do, so they took the first one? Which is reasonable enough, IMO.

    If you disagree, then you can earn some karma by posting a comment with a list of other reviews.

  23. Maximum cable length on Thunderbolt vs. SuperSpeed USB · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Thunderbolt is interesting because of the potential maximum cable length. The current cupper cables are limited to 3 meters, but once optical cables are available, "10s of meters" will be possible.

    Since you can run both display, keyboard and mouse over one cable natively, this means that you can put your computer with its noisy fans into the basement, use a single thunderbolt cable, and just have an extremely thin client at your workstation.

  24. Standard library on Google Starts to Detail Dart · · Score: 1

    The corelib looks very sparse: http://www.dartlang.org/docs/api/index.html

    The thing I like about jquery and dojo is that you actually get a reasonable standard library, which JS sorely lacks. It would be nice if dart included a better standard library.

  25. Re:Another Report by the Same Institution Conclude on ISPs 'Exaggerate the Cost of Data' · · Score: 1

    > that dinosaurs are in fact extinct

    According to the current understanding, birds are a subfamily of dinosaurs.